馃憠 Try now NerdPal! Our new math app on iOS and Android

Find the limit of $\frac{x^2+4}{5+3e^{\left(2x+1\right)}}$ as $x$ approaches $\infty $

Related Videos

Go!
Math mode
Text mode
Go!
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0
a
b
c
d
f
g
m
n
u
v
w
x
y
z
.
(◻)
+
-
×
◻/◻
/
÷
2

e
π
ln
log
log
lim
d/dx
Dx
|◻|
θ
=
>
<
>=
<=
sin
cos
tan
cot
sec
csc

asin
acos
atan
acot
asec
acsc

sinh
cosh
tanh
coth
sech
csch

asinh
acosh
atanh
acoth
asech
acsch

Pre-Calculus - Graphing rational functions using 5 steps, g(x) = (-3x^2 + x + 12) / (x^2 - 4)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fG2HAWBNVNE

Pre-Calculus - Operations with functions f(x) = 2x -5 , g(x) = 2-x and f(x) = x^2+6 , g(x) root(1-x)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rthRvbioYyU

Calculus - Find the derivative of the inverse of a radical equation, f(x)=sqrt(x^2 +6x); find g'(4)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErarY1CS-bY

Limit of (sin x)/x as x approaches 0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xitzTutKqM

Pre-Calculus - Learn how to find the sine of 5 pi over 4 without a calculator, sin(5(pi)/4)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTmwVQFNM7E

Calculus - Take the log of both sides to find the derivative, y = (x(x^2 + 1)^2)/(sqrt(2x^2 - 1))

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aF6Ck6ZRxw

Function Plot

Plotting: $\frac{x^2+4}{5+3e^{\left(2x+1\right)}}$

Main Topic: Limits to Infinity

The limit of a function f(x) when x tends to infinity is the value that the function takes as the value of x grows indefinitely.

Used Formulas

5. See formulas

Your Math & Physics Tutor. Powered by AI

Available 24/7, 365.

Unlimited step-by-step math solutions. No ads.

Includes multiple solving methods.

Support for more than 100 math topics.

Premium access on our iOS and Android apps as well.

20% discount on online tutoring.

Choose your subscription plan:
Have a promo code?
Pay $39.97 USD securely with your payment method.
Please hold while your payment is being processed.
Create an Account